Olfactory Research in Dogs 3031393694, 9783031393693

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Table of contents :
Contents
Fundamentals of Olfactory Function
Peripheral Olfactory Pathway Anatomy, Physiology, and Genetics
1 Olfactory System Overview
2 Nasal Cavity
3 Olfactory Neuroepithelia Functional Cytoarchitecture
4 Peri-receptor Environment
5 Olfactory Receptors, Gene Families, Expression, and Evolution
6 Atypical Receptor Expression
7 Comparative Olfactory Functional Variations
References
Neuroanatomy and Neurophysiology of the Olfactory Signal Transduction Pathway
1 Olfactory Signal Transduction Pathway: Peripheral Nervous System
2 Olfactory Signal Transduction Pathway: Central Nervous System
References
Canine Olfactory Dysfunction
1 Introduction
1.1 Overview of Olfaction
1.2 Impact of Aging on Olfaction
1.3 Lessons Learned from COVID
2 Disease States that Affect Olfaction
2.1 Overview of Nasal Disease in the Dog
2.2 Disease Syndromes Associated with Olfactory Dysfunction in Dogs
2.3 Disease Syndromes Associated with Olfactory Dysfunction in Humans
3 Environmental and Pharmaceutical Exposures
4 Final Thoughts
References
Methodological Considerations in Dog Olfaction Research and Implementation
Behavioral Characteristics Associated with Detection Dog Success
1 Introduction
2 Behavioral Characteristics
2.1 Olfactory Behavior
2.2 Motivational Drives
2.3 Stress Resilience, Fear, and Anxiety
3 Sourcing and Selecting Detection Dogs
4 Conclusions
References
Canine Olfactometry: Tools, Techniques, and Procedures
1 Odor Delivery Tools
2 Manual Passive Odor Presentation
3 Olfactometry
4 Olfactometers and Canine Assessors
5 Future Olfactometry: Gas Chromatography-Olfactometry (GC-O)
6 Animal Training Technologies
7 Consideration and Limitations
8 Conclusions
References
Sources of Human Bias in Canine Olfactory Research
1 Introduction
2 Handler Effects
3 Single-Blind Testing
4 Double-Blind Testing
5 Observer Bias
6 Conclusion
References
Human Scent Dynamics—Combining Theory and Practice in Locating People
1 Introduction
2 Processes Involved in the Creation and Spreading of Odor Plumes
2.1 Odor Plumes
2.2 Categorizing Plume Types
3 Humans as Scent Source
4 Articles as a Scent Source
5 Track as a Scent source
6 Practical Conclusions
References
Olfaction and Behavior in Dogs: Applications to Cognition, Training, and Welfare
Dog Olfactory Cognition
1 Odor Memory
1.1 Working Memory
1.2 Long-Term Memory
1.3 Episodic Memory
1.4 Context-Dependent Memory
2 Categories and Concepts
3 Abstract Concepts
4 Odor Representations
5 Olfactory Quantity Discrimination
6 Conclusion and Future Directions
References
Olfactory Learning and Training Methods
1 Odor Learning
1.1 Classically Conditioning the Odor
2 Discrimination
3 The Final Response (Indication/Alert)
4 The Search
4.1 Target Odor Placement
4.2 Handler Assessment of the Search Area
5 Generalization
5.1 Sequential Training
5.2 Compound Training
5.3 Intermixed Training
5.4 Categorization
6 Schedules of Reinforcement and Extinction
6.1 Secondary Reinforcers
6.2 Use of Non-Hazardous Odors
6.3 Unknown Substances
7 False Positive and False Negative Alerts
7.1 The Go/No-Go Paradigm
8 Training Session Structure
8.1 Length of Training Searches
8.2 Fitness
9 Motivation, Arousal, and Performance
9.1 Motivation and Deprivation
10 Human Handler Influence
11 Extraneous Factors that Affect Performance
12 Conclusion
13 Glossary of Learning Theory Terminology Commonly Applied in the Field.
13.1 Associative Learning
13.2 Neutral Stimulus
13.3 Unconditioned Stimulus
13.4 Conditioned Stimulus
13.5 Classical Conditioning
13.6 Operant Conditioning
13.7 Contingency
13.8 Contiguity
13.9 Positive Reinforcement
13.10 Primary Reinforcers
13.11 Secondary Reinforcers:
13.12 Differential Reinforcement
13.13 Intermittent Reinforcement (see Pearce 2013)
13.14 Shaping
13.15 Discriminative Stimulus—SD
13.16 Higher Order Conditioning
13.17 Habituation
13.18 Latent Inhibition
13.19 Sensitivity
13.20 Specificity
References
Olfaction and Dog Welfare
1 Introduction
2 The Value of Olfaction
3 Loss of Sense of Smell
3.1 Has Selective Breeding Negatively Impacted “Olfactory” Welfare?
4 Specific Odours Can Have a Calming Effect
5 Plant-Based Products
6 Pheromonotherapy: Dog Appeasing Pheromone (DAP)
7 Olfactory Enrichment and Stimulation
8 Aversive Scents Can Impact Welfare Negatively
9 Olfaction and Memory Are Tightly Linked
10 Value of Odour from Familiar People and Dogs
11 Odour of Individuals in Different Emotional States Affects the Recipient
12 Welfare of Dogs Used for Olfactory Work
13 Aspects of Housing and Husbandry are also Vitally Important
14 In Conclusion
References
Applications of Dog Olfactory Capabilities
Forensic and Security Applications of Substance Detection Canines
1 Introduction
2 Substance Detection Canines and the Law
2.1 Implications of Research in Legal Settings
2.2 Security Considerations
3 Chemical Analysis of Odor
4 Applications
4.1 Contraband Detection
4.2 Human Scent
4.3 Human-Related Evidence
5 Conclusions and Future Direction
References
Detection of Human Diseases for Medical Diagnostics
1 Introduction
2 Cancer Detection
2.1 Prostate Cancer
2.2 Breast Cancer
2.3 Lung Cancer
2.4 Colorectal
2.5 Cervical and Ovarian Cancers
2.6 Bladder
2.7 Malignant Skin Melanoma
2.8 Other Human Cancers Detected by Dogs
3 Detection of Human Infectious Diseases by Dogs
3.1 Bacteriuria
3.2 Clostridium
3.3 Pseudomonas
3.4 Malaria
3.5 Parkinson’s
4 Methodological Challenges
5 Conclusion and Future Directions
References
Detecting Physiological Changes in Humans: Medical Alert and Assistance Dogs
1 Introduction
2 Terminology and Regulation
3 Volatile Organic Compounds and Canine Olfaction
4 Conditions for Which Dogs Are Trained to Assist
4.1 Diabetic Alert Dogs
4.2 Seizures
4.3 Migraines
4.4 Addison’s Disease and Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (PoTS)
4.5 Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
4.6 Narcolepsy
4.7 Psychiatric Conditions
5 Impact of Medical Alert Dogs on Owner Well-Being
6 Selection and Training of Medical Alert Dogs
7 Future of Alert and Assistance Dogs
References
Considerations for Detection Dog–Handler Teams in Infectious Agent Surveillance
1 Introduction
2 The Choice of Detection Dog Teams
2.1 Dog Selection
2.2 Handler Selection
2.3 Canine Training Considerations Prior to Deployment
3 Training Sample Selection and Maintenance
3.1 Practical Detection Considerations
3.2 Perception Considerations
4 Conclusion
References
A Critical Review of the Use of Wildlife Conservation Canines in Species-at-Risk Research
1 Introduction
2 Olfactory Psychophysics: A Methodological Comment and Emerging Opportunities for Training and Assessment
2.1 Detection: Yes/No, Go/No-Go
2.2 Discrimination: mAFC
2.3 Identification: Matching-To-Sample
2.4 Scaling: Threshold
2.5 Classical Olfactory Psychophysics and Signal Detection Theory
2.6 Why Consider Detection, Discrimination, Identification, and Scaling?
3 Search: Trailing and Tracking
4 Recent Studies Using Wildlife Conservation Dogs
4.1 Comparison of Wildlife Conservation Dogs to Other Methods
4.2 Human Search Teams
4.3 Traditional Survey Techniques
4.4 Existing Training Protocols
4.5 Cost of Employing Conservation Canines
4.6 Factors Influencing Dog Performance
5 Conclusion
Appendix
References
Recommend Papers

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Lucia Lazarowski Editor

Olfactory Research in Dogs

Olfactory Research in Dogs

Lucia Lazarowski Editor

Olfactory Research in Dogs

Editor Lucia Lazarowski Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine Auburn, AL, USA

ISBN 978-3-031-39369-3 ISBN 978-3-031-39370-9 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-39370-9 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors, and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. This Springer imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland Paper in this product is recyclable.

Contents

Fundamentals of Olfactory Function Peripheral Olfactory Pathway Anatomy, Physiology, and Genetics . . . . . . Melissa Singletary and Samantha Hagerty Neuroanatomy and Neurophysiology of the Olfactory Signal Transduction Pathway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Melissa Singletary and Samantha Hagerty Canine Olfactory Dysfunction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . David C. Dorman

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Methodological Considerations in Dog Olfaction Research and Implementation Behavioral Characteristics Associated with Detection Dog Success . . . . . . Lucia Lazarowski and Bart Rogers

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Canine Olfactometry: Tools, Techniques, and Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Edgar O. Aviles-Rosa, Vidia Gokool, Nathaniel Hall, and Lauryn DeGreeff

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Sources of Human Bias in Canine Olfactory Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 Sarah Krichbaum, Jordan G. Smith, Craig Angle, Paul Waggoner, and Lucia Lazarowski Human Scent Dynamics—Combining Theory and Practice in Locating People . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129 G. A. A. Schoon and P. A. Moore Olfaction and Behavior in Dogs: Applications to Cognition, Training, and Welfare Dog Olfactory Cognition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153 Adam Davila, Jordan G. Smith, Emma Cox, Lane Montgomery, Sarah Krichbaum, Lucia Lazarowski, and Jeffrey S. Katz

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Contents

Olfactory Learning and Training Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177 Lyn Caldicott, Helen E. Zulch, Thomas W. Pike, and Anna Wilkinson Olfaction and Dog Welfare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205 Nicola J. Rooney and Zoe Parr-Cortes Applications of Dog Olfactory Capabilities Forensic and Security Applications of Substance Detection Canines . . . . . 237 Paola Prada-Tiedemann, Lauryn DeGreeff, and Craig Schultz Detection of Human Diseases for Medical Diagnostics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291 Astrid Concha Detecting Physiological Changes in Humans: Medical Alert and Assistance Dogs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 333 Catherine Reeve and Clara Wilson Considerations for Detection Dog–Handler Teams in Infectious Agent Surveillance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 357 Amritha Mallikarjun and Cynthia M. Otto A Critical Review of the Use of Wildlife Conservation Canines in Species-at-Risk Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375 Simon Gadbois, Laura Elliott, and Meredith Flannery

Fundamentals of Olfactory Function

Peripheral Olfactory Pathway Anatomy, Physiology, and Genetics Melissa Singletary and Samantha Hagerty

Abstract

Various sensory systems provide environmental awareness and have evolved to meet species-specific needs. The earliest of these senses thought to be chemosensory in function include olfaction. Olfactory acuity varies greatly by species, with intra-species variations also notable. Broadly, a species’ olfactory capability is categorized based on their overall olfactory development; species with a well-developed olfactory capability are macrosmatic (e.g. dogs, rats), compared to microsmatics (e.g. humans) with less developed sense of smell. A multitude of factors may influence this inter-species olfactory performance, which include anatomical and physiological variations across species. Despite these performance gradients, the foundational olfactory cytoarchitecture and cellular constituents appear to be fairly conserved across species. The field of olfaction has seen an increase in research since the discovery of olfactory receptors as G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) and part of the largest multi-gene family of receptors found in the mammalian gene repertoire by Linda Buck and Richard Axell in 1991 (Buck and Axel, Cell 65:175–187, 1991) winning them the Nobel Prize in 2004. However, the field remains understudied in relation to the other sensory systems and lacks significant comparative studies across species. The use of translational models, such as mice and rats, has served to provide the predominant foundational knowledge of olfactory sensory systems.

M. Singletary (B) Canine Performance Sciences, Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn, AL 36849, USA e-mail: [email protected] M. Singletary · S. Hagerty Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Pharmacology, Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn, AL 36849, USA © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 L. Lazarowski (ed.), Olfactory Research in Dogs, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-39370-9_1

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M. Singletary and S. Hagerty

This chapter will focus on the understanding of olfaction through an anatomical, physiological, and genetic foundation, highlighting the dog through the peripheral nervous system. Keywords

Olfaction • Olfactory anatomy • Olfactory genetics • Peripheral olfactory system

1

Olfactory System Overview

Odors carry information regarding the past and the present including qualitative, quantitative, spatial, and temporal elements of a surrounding environment. Intraspecies and interspecies structural olfactory system variations reflect qualitative and quantitative differences, representing the complexity in anticipated and observed olfactory acuity. This overview will discuss these events in a comparative fashion across multiple species with emphasis on the dog. Olfaction is one of two main chemosensory systems in mammals along with gustation. The olfactory system is considered the first sensory system to develop evolutionarily and has remained highly conserved across species, comprising the largest gene superfamily in mammals (Glusman et al. 2001; Reed 2004; Niimura 2012; Persuy et al. 2015). There are two main divisions of the olfactory system and, in species such as rodents, two lesser divisions. Of the two main divisions, the main olfactory epithelium (MOE) is responsible for the detection of volatile compounds and makes up the largest area of the olfactory system. Second, the vomeronasal organ (VNO) is primarily responsible for the detection of pheromones. The two less prominent components of the olfactory system in rodent species, in particular, include the Grueneberg’s ganglion and septal organ (SO), or the Organ of Masera (Rodolfo-Maera 1943). Grueneberg’s ganglion (GG) is spatially isolated from the MOE, located in the rostrodorsal aspect of the nasal cavity and is suggested to have thermosensory and chemosensory roles, with the capacity to sense coolness (Mamasuew et al. 2008) and alarm pheromones (Kikusui et al. 2001). While Grueneberg’s ganglion has been identified in humans, its potential functional similarities to that in rodent counterspecies are not yet established (Gruneberg 1973). An isolated patch of neuroepithelium, known as the septal organ (SO), resides bilaterally on the caudoventral aspect of the nasal septum and is present in rodents and other mammalian species such as the koala (Kratzing 1984). The SO is thought to function as an airflow sensor (Ma 2010) and traditional chemosensory region similar to the MOE with a greatly reduced receptor repertoire (Grosmaitre et al. 2007). In dogs, there is a lack of evidence to support the presence of the SO or GG (Barrios et al. 2014). The VNO is adjacent to the nasal septum and is surrounded by cartilaginous walls. The anterior VNO duct is stratified squamous epithelium and the posterior is a simple columnar epithelium. In the dog all VNO receptors are VR-1 based (Quignon et al. 2006; Dzieciol et al. 2020).

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Though there is controversy regarding the estimates of how many odors can be discriminated, it is recognized that there is an impressively large number of natural odors and odor combinations that can be discriminated by our sense of smell, and more so by macrosmatic species. The variety of odorants far outweighs the number of receptors, and the complex levels of cross-reactions result in a combinatorial coding, which leads to an indeterminate amount of possible odor perceptions (Malnic et al. 1999; Kurian et al. 2021). In rats, it has been shown that classification of mixtures according to the molar ratios of components occurs which allows for detection across a range of concentrations rather than specificity to a single previously learned concentration (Uchida and Mainen 2007). Domestication in dogs has resulted in significant variation across breeds and divergence of characteristics from ancestral wolves. Domesticated dogs commonly demonstrate superior olfactory acuity to their human counterparts, and there are various foundational morphological and physiological underpinnings in support of this macrosmatic categorization. However, there are some reports that suggest the morphological characteristics of olfactory acuity of domestic dogs are diminished in relation to their ancestral wolves as measured by relative cribriform plate surface area size across 46 breeds of dogs (Bird et al. 2020, 2021). Significant neuroanatomical variations were noted across evaluation of 33 breeds by Hecht et al., noting that variations in specific neural networks were correlated with breed specialization within more recent phylogenetic terminal branches (Hecht et al. 2019). Volatile compound properties, odor complexity, olfactory receptor odotype distribution, airflow rate, passage volume, mucosa surface area, and mucus solubility impact the odor availability, receptor interaction, and ultimately the odor precept. Various odorants, odorant combinations or varying concentrations result in activation of unique ensembles of odor receptors. Interactions including a range of receptor affinity agonism and antagonism contribute to the combinatorial coding at the odor receptor level (Malnic et al. 1999; Kurian et al. 2021). Binary and more complex mixtures in rodent model studies have shown complex and non-linear relationships. A recent study by Zak et al. (2020) explored the dynamic range of complex mixture in a freely breathing mouse model. Both olfactory sensory neuron (OSN) and glomerular imaging were conducted under an active sniffing evaluation across varying odor concentration and odor mixture presentations revealing a degree of mixture suppression corresponding to increased odor components (Zak et al. 2020). Input is received and modified at multiple levels. The intricate balance of signal activation and inhibition is not well understood within the olfactory system regarding complex odor mixtures. From its source, an odor will undergo various conditions and interactions along its journey that will ultimately influence its availability and perception by an animal. Volatile availability is affected by the originating form and configuration influenced by factors such as surface area and surface moisture (Jorgensen 2009). Further effects on odor availability come from the environment under which they are present, influenced by factors such as ambient temperature, humidity, air

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velocity, presence of airborne particulate matter, and barometric pressure (Kuehn et al. 2008; Ajmani et al. 2016; Qifan et al. 2017). Each of these factors described thus far may promote or inhibit an odorant’s movement toward engagement with the central nervous system and olfactory sensory pathway. The destination of a particular odorant may be entrapment, diversion, expulsion, degradation, metabolization, conversion, and varying affinity for direct or indirect receptor interaction within olfactory and non-olfactory sensory systems. When an odorant’s journey results in interaction with an odor receptor of positive affinity and binding adequate for activation, it begins the translation of an environmental chemical signal into an electrical one through signal transduction within the olfactory sensory neuron.

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Nasal Cavity

An animal’s initial engagement with odor occurs at the entrance to the olfactory pathway in the nares. Upon entrance, the odorants traverse the intricate nasal passages where internal environmental factors influence their ultimate destination and interaction, such as passage diameter, air velocity, epithelial cytoarchitecture, mucous constituents, mucous viscosity, odor receptor distribution, and the air-flow path dynamics (Lawson et al. 2012; Challis et al. 2015; Rygg et al. 2017; RobertHazotte et al. 2019). The nares’ morphological and physiological characteristics vary across species. As the initial interface between odorant and anatomical structures, the morphology of the nares influences odorant delivery to chemosensory epithelia. While signal transduction processing at the receptor level is fairly conserved across species, the gross anatomical features vary greatly. Some aquatic species can have a blind-ended cavity with up to four up to four nostrils. Most mammals display bilateral nostrils supporting a dual functioning respiratory-olfactory design. An example of physical impact on odor delivery can be observed in some teleosts, wherein two of the four nostrils connect to form a one-way system of flow to the olfactory organ, facilitating a single-direction flow system for odorant delivery and transportation that allows for continuous undisrupted access to incoming odors (Niimura 2012). Additionally, the widely-separated and lateral positioning of the nares in some aquatic organisms has implicated roles in spatial and directional cues, particularly with low visibility. It has been suggested that the dog as a species exhibits some of the largest morphological variation amongst land mammals due to wide breed variations (Ostrander 2012). In the dog, the nares represents a highly efficient design for external volatile sampling as examined through experimental fluid dynamic modeling and analysis of the functional aerodynamics associated with the sniff (Staymates et al. 2016; Settles et al. 2003; Craven et al. 2004, 2009). Nostril flexure along with nasal aperture anatomy controls air movement separately from inspiration to expiration (Settles et al. 2003). Sniffing activity results in air from within a 1–2 cm range being inhaled through the nostrils directed centrally. Upon

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exhalation the warmed and moistened air is expelled through the lateral slits or flaps that push the air ventrolaterally. This pattern of exhalation is suggested to enhance volatilization of nearby odorants, increasing the odorants within the inspiratory sampling field minimizing dilution, direct resampling or contamination of the central inhalational field, improving odor availability and sensitivity by the dog. Sniffing is a sinusoidal pattern that cycles through an inspiratory and expiratory phase at a frequency of up to 20 sniffs/minute at 4–7 Hz (Staymates et al. 2016). The sniffing pattern may change based on the task and can quickly change nostril selectivity based on biological relevance and odor-associations of the odor present (Siniscalchi et al. 2011, 2016; Cavelius et al. 2022). The sniffing cycle is influenced by the physiological properties of each nasal pathway separately. The highly vascularized tissue of the rostral nasal respiratory pathway cycles through a shifting lateralized congestion changing the airflow dynamics respectively through this selective tissue swelling (Friling et al. 2014). This tissue is sensitive to selective activation from the autonomic nervous system resulting in congestion. Internally, once an odorant has passed the entrance at the nares, it will travel through the nasal vestibule, past the nasal meatuses onto the ethmoturbinates to reach the sensory cilia of the olfactory epithelium where the odorant will interact with receptors and initiate the cascade of events that lead to the recognition of an odor. The nasal cavity is divided into three main anatomical regions, which encompass the nasal vestibule, the respiratory, and the olfactory (Craven et al. 2007). Each piece and part of the pathway has a role to play and can be speciesspecific in form and function. For example, the dog and rat have an elongated nasal passageway with a dedicated olfactory recess located posterior to the primary respiratory division. The longer nasal cavity of the dog may increase sensitivity and discrimination by the relatively longer time-of-flight comparison of odorant deposition compared to humans. An evaluation of natural odor sampling behavior in a rat model indicated that sniff strength has a very limited role on shaping the primary odor precept (Cenier et al. 2013). However, sniffing in the canine model has shown that approximately 2.5 times more air is directed to the olfactory recess during active sniffing compared to quiet breathing and results in a corresponding increase in uptake of highly and moderately soluble odorants in the sensory field per unit of time (Rygg et al. 2017). Upper respiratory and olfactory airways are structurally supported by the boney composition of the skull. The rostroventral surface of the passageway is formed by the bilateral incisive bones, with the lateral to dorsolateral walls formed by the maxillary bone, rostrodorsal surface by the nasal bone, and most caudal aspect formed by the ethmoid bone. The ethmoid bone is comprised of three regions, including the nasal septum extending directionally from caudal to rostral, dividing the midline of the nasal passages, the ethmoturbinates (also referred to as ethmoid labyrinth), and the perforated osseous cribriform plate. This plate consisting of numerous perforations through which axons traverse as the neuronal

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communication highway of odorant information directed toward the central nervous system from the olfactory epithelium. The caudoventral aspect of the nasal septum is formed by the vomer bone, an osseous structure partially making up the roof of the choanae, which form the openings of each nasal cavity to the associated nasopharyngeal meatus (Evans and de Lahunta 2013). The most anterior portion of the nasal cavity through which odorants first enter is lined by a stratified squamous epithelium (Randall et al. 1987). Collectively called the vestibule, this passageway divides into meatuses that are also referred to as turbinals or concha. These curved structures, including the maxilloturbinal, nasoturbinal, and ethmoturbinals, extend inward from the lateral walls of the nasal cavity forming a fold-like appearance. The number of meatuses, turbinals, or concha vary between species, though in the canine middle vestibule, three main divisions are identified as the dorsal, vetral, and middle meatus (Moore 1981). They are functionally thought to be involved in directing airflow, reducing turbulence, and creating a sub-climate for inspired air to be warmed, humidified, and filtered (Menco and Morrison 2003). In dogs, the turbinate complex includes multiple turbinates and concha. Six ectoturbinates are localized laterally with some projection into the frontal sinus. Four endoturbinates are localized medially forming the dorsal concha and middle concha with ectoturbinates I and II, respectively, then the ventral concha independently (Barrios et al. 2014). This complex scrollwork provides large surface area supporting an environmental chamber for air movement, heating, moisturizing, protection, and odor molecule transport. On gross examination of the relative tissues in the nasal cavity, there is a distinct coloration change from sensory epithelia, which is yellow to brown, to respiratory epithelia, which is pink to red. From a histological perspective, the epithelial thickness and constituents vary significantly but have some overlap in the transition zones where the two epithelia meet. In mammals, this passageway is dual functioning in the act of inhalation for both respiration and olfaction. It serves as a conduit for air carrying volatile odorants and oxygen molecules to sensory neurons and pulmonary organs, respectively. Infrastructure of the upper airway, including the nasal cavity, larynx, and trachea, are crucial for protection of more vulnerable lower airway regions. The epithelia lining the nasal septum is both sensory and non-sensory in nature, with the anterior-most aspect comprised of stratified squamous epithelium transitioning to non-sensory respiratory epithelium and ending in sensory olfactory epithelium in the posterior region. Cells of the respiratory epithelial tissue secrete high levels of defensins and antimicrobial peptides within the mucous layer lining. This mucous layer, which traps foreign particles from inhaled air, lies atop the apical surface of a stratified columnar epithelium covered in cilia with motile function allowing movement of the mucus to be directed away from the lower respiratory system. The mucous layer terminates in either the nasopharynx where it is discarded into the gastrointestinal tract or the nasal vestibule for removal by sneezing or manual discard. Mucosal microenvironments have been found to house a diverse range of

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immunologically protective microbes through actions such as competitive inhibition, antimicrobial peptide production, enzymatic degradation, and innate immune cell priming. Most evaluations of the respiratory tract have neglected to evaluate the olfactory mucosa as a separate system, though early studies suggest it is not equivalent (Francois et al. 2016). Air containing odorant molecules is filtered, warmed, and humidified throughout the passage over respiratory epithelium and continues toward the folded labyrinth of ethmoturbinate structures in the most caudal aspect of the nasal cavity, which is lined with pseudostratified ciliated columnar olfactory epithelium. This epithelium is considered sensory due to the presence of ciliated olfactory sensory neurons, on which many transmembrane olfactory receptors (OR) reside. Here, odorants will interact with receptors that line the ciliary processes, resulting in a cascade of downstream signal transduction events that will be further detailed. An orthonasal route of odorant introduction is the classically described nasal passageway, through which both passive and active exposure occurs with the physical action of sniffing. Alternatively, in some cases, odorants may be introduced to olfactory epithelium retronasally when propagated from the oral cavity through the choanae in the caudodorsal nasopharynx to reach the nasal cavity and sensory structures for recognition (Small et al. 2005). However, it has been suggested that this retronasal olfaction is not significantly biologically relevant in dogs (Rygg et al. 2017). The main classical airflow in the dog is directed at higher velocities through the dorsal region of the left/right nasal cavity toward the olfactory recess curling back as it turns ventro-rostrallly, allowing a second pass over the olfactory epithelium. It is proposed that this air movement through the olfactory recess maximizes odorant exposure to the olfactory epithelium (Craven et al. 2007, 2009, 2010). This feature of the dedicated olfactory recess is lacking in humans and is thought to contribute to the higher olfactory acuity seen in dogs. The separate nostrils, similar to other sensory structures such as ears and eyes, allow for a bilateral comparison between left and right-sided sensory input resulting in improved distinction of stimulus intensity and spatiotemporal parameters (Craven et al. 2010). Hemispheric olfactory lateralization has been suggested through behavioral studies (Webber et al. 1987; Sobel et al. 1999; Siniscalchi et al. 2008, 2011, 2016). Olfactory lateralization starts with odorant delivery from two nostrils into two distinct and separate nasal chambers. Airflow patterns are mirrored on both left and right sides where the incoming air is split across a dorsally directed path representing 12–13% of inspired air by the dog, which travels caudally to enter the olfactory recess (Craven et al. 2010). The ventrally directed path moves the remaining inspired air caudally to the pharynx where it enters the pulmonary tract for gas exchange and respiration. The significant tissue structures that line this tract direct these airflow patterns creating turbulence, air particulate deposition patterns and microclimates within the nasal cavity (Rygg et al. 2017). In human studies, it is suggested that the absorption qualities, high or low, of an odor are varied correspondingly to airflow, low or high, resulting in optimal sensitivity respectively (Sobel et al. 1999).

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Olfactory Neuroepithelia Functional Cytoarchitecture

The main olfactory epithelium (MOE), characterized histologically as pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium, is populated with both sensory and supportive cellular structures. Olfactory sensory neurons (OSN), also known as olfactory receptor neurons (ORN) and considered the parenchymal cell type of olfactory tissue, are true bipolar neurons. Extending from the soma toward the mucosal surface is a dendritic knob-like ending with approximately 20–30 non-motile cilia. Extending from the soma in the opposite direction the axon extends and terminates at the olfactory bulb (Morrison and Costanzo 1990). The dendritic processes allow for increased surface area of the receptive field for odorant sampling. More specific measurements have reported an estimated ciliary surface area of 23 cm2 and knob density of 60,000 knobs/mm2 (Menco and Jackson 1997; Doty 1998). OSN are surrounded by supporting (sustentacular) cells, whose primary function is to provide structural integrity to the surrounding epithelium. Supporting cells span from the mucosal surface to the basement membrane and are lined apically with microvilli. In mammals, the sustentacular cells have been classically shown to serve as an epithelial support structure and contribute to the microenvironment homeostasis through production of aqueous secretions and various cytokines. In more recent discoveries, these cells also show a schwann cell-like attribute through enwrapment of the olfactory sensory neuron dendrites (Liang 2020). Other principal cellular components within the olfactory mucosa include basal cells and Bowman’s gland duct cells (Moran et al. 1982; Menco and Morrison 2003). Basal cells, which are found in the lower region of the epithelium near the basal lamina, have been found to act as progenitor cells for regenerating OSN following injury or natural maturation and turnover (Morrison and Costanzo 1989; Menco and Morrison 2003). The Bowman’s glands are the primary secretory gland of the olfactory epithelium with some contribution from supporting cells, while goblet cells represent the principal secretory cells in non-sensory respiratory epithelium (Solbu and Holen 2012). The secretory composition from Bowman’s glandular ducts is a diverse seromucous mixture of enzymes, acids, mucopolysaccharides, immune factors, antioxidants, antimicrobial proteins, and odorant binding proteins (OBP). The subepithelial region houses Bowman’s gland acinar cells and glandular bulbs, Schwann cells, vasculature, connective tissue, and the OSN axonal fascicles (Ramon-Cueto and Avila 1998). German shepherd olfactory mucosa spans 200 cm2 while in the cocker spaniel only 67 cm2 , though significantly greater than the human at 5 cm2 (Quignon et al. 2012; Galibert et al. 2016). There is considerable structural refinement present in the dog as compared to other species such as the sheep, with greater overall thickness of the olfactory epithelium and higher olfactory sensory neuron density within the cellular cytoarchitecture (60–80% of cells) estimating greater than 100 million OSN in the OE of the dog (Craven et al. 2010). The ciliary dendritic knob, which protrudes into the mucous layer at the apical surface, is lined with many sensory receptors that interact with odorants, which are dissolved or actively transported by odorant binding proteins from incoming

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air flow. Following initial molecular events at the receptor level, generated signals travel through the axon towards the olfactory bulb for further processing. All OSN axons collectively form what is known anatomically as the first cranial nerve (CN I), or the olfactory nerve, which is classified as a special visceral afferent (SVA) fiber (Doty 1998). A mouse model evaluating olfactory receptor neuron ciliary length showed a pattern of intrinsic arrangement suggested to enhance odor detection sensitivity and acuity (Challis et al. 2015). The length of cilia corresponds to the odorant response and odorant absorption in the nasal cavity (Challis et al. 2015). Cilia play a role in mammalian odor adaptation as one part of various complex mechanisms and feedback circuits within the olfactory pathway, which can be rapid or persistent in form (Zufall and Leinders-Zufall 2000). Numerous factors contribute to olfactory acuity, which are observable interspecies and intraspecies. The number of olfactory receptors can change with age. A study by Kavoi et al. demonstrated dogs to have an overall increase in cilia olfactory receptor density from birth to adulthood while other species such as sheep showed a decrease in density with maturation, which may suggest that postnatal odor development is important to maximizing function (Kavoi and Jameela 2011). Unlike most neurons, OSNs are continuously exposed to the external environment making them more vulnerable to physical, chemical, thermal, or pathogenic damage. Thus, the ability to repair and regenerate is a crucial characteristic of the olfactory system. Injury models in the olfactory system have demonstrated the stem cell function of basal cells (Graziadei and Graziadei 1979; Schwob et al. 1995), which can be further categorized into globose basal cells (GBC) or horizontal basal cells (HBC) based on their respective morphologies and activity level. GBC are continuously active stem cells responsible for routine turnover or acute maintenance of OSN (Schwob et al. 1995). Horizontal basal cells are generally quiescent and demonstrate mitotic activity only after severe and complete olfactory epithelial trauma where proliferation of all cell types is required (Leung et al. 2007; Mackay-Sim 2010; Suzuki et al. 2013). Maturing OSN gradually extend from the basement membrane through the pseudostratified neuroepithelial cell population, growing a new dendritic process that eventually reaches the mucosal surface and develops cilia. During this maturation process, an axon will navigate through the cribriform plate perforations reaching a glomerulus of the olfactory bulb and reestablishing a complete synaptic interface. The olfactory ensheathing cell (OEC) is essential in supporting the migration of the new axons to their target glomeruli exhibiting phenotypic and functional properties onto OSNs and basal cells in the OE to aide in axonal elongation (Ramon-Cueto and Avila 1998). Further investigation into the mechanism of these growth-promoting properties has shown a family of proteinases, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), to be critical for cell motility and ability to transverse extracellular matrix through support of the neurotrophic factors secreted by OEC (Ould-Yahoui et al. 2013). The estimated lifespan of a given OSN differs by species and by environmental exposure amongst other factors. However, one estimate in mice maintained under

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laboratory conditions suggests a given OSN lifespan averages 30–90 days but some reported out to more than one year (Hinds et al. 1984; Kondo et al. 2010; Holl 2018). The neurogenerative capacity of individual olfactory sensory neurons allows for remarkably fast recovery periods of approximately 4–8 weeks in humans with some species-specific variations among mammals (Costanzo 1991).

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Peri-receptor Environment

The unique mucosal surface of the olfactory epithelium with its cellular constituents functions in peri-receptor odorant and odor-receptor interaction modifications. Odorants brought to the olfactory epithelium may traverse the mucous layer interacting with microbiota, enzymes, proteins, cytokines, immune cells, and metals. Emerging work to establish the microbial composition of the olfactory system has demonstrated a core biome in mice of two dominant phyla, Firmicutes (30–70%) and Bacteroidetes (15–60%), followed by Proteobacteria (5–25%) and Actinobacteria (